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Title: 

Revenue: How to Tax Private Higher Education

Authors: Casey, Jack
Brown, Shantelle
Keywords: Municipal Finance;Fiscal Policy;Tax Exempt Institutions;Endowment Taxation;New York City;Real Utopias
Issue Date: Feb-2026
Series/Report no.: Affordability, Dignity, and Democratic Control: Towards Transformative Municipal Governance In New York City;8
Abstract: This working paper analyzes how New York City and its allies could secure substantial, durable revenue from wealthy private universities and other tax-exempt institutions that hold extensive property and endowments while contributing relatively little to local budgets. It documents the magnitude of foregone revenue under New York’s broad nonprofit property-tax exemption, highlighting how major institutions like Columbia and NYU avoid hundreds of millions annually even as public services and CUNY/SUNY confront austerity pressures. The paper assesses three strategic pathways: targeted litigation to reclassify certain nonprofit activities as effectively for-profit, expansion of voluntary and currently limited PILOT/SILOT arrangements, and taxation of endowments building on recent federal precedent. It argues that the most promising route combines a strengthened federal endowment tax with clearer authorization for municipal endowment taxes or an unrelated-business-income style framework, aiming to produce a more equitable and dependable revenue stream.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2451/75573
Appears in Collections:Urban Democracy Lab

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